The grooming of a chancellor / George Alleyne.
Kingston, Jamaica : The University of the West Indies Press, 2018 2018Description: xviii, 275 pages, 10 unnumbered pages of plates ; 23 cmContent type:- text
- unmediated
- volume
- 9766406510
- 9789766406516
- Alleyne, G. A. O
- University of the West Indies -- Administration -- Biography
- Pan American Health Organization -- Administration -- Biography
- World Health Organization -- Administration -- Biography
- Alleyne, G. A. O
- Pan American Health Organization
- University of the West Indies
- World Health Organization
- College administrators -- Biography
- Medical colleges -- Faculty -- Biography
- Medical personnel -- Biography
- College administrators
- Management
- Medical colleges -- Faculty
- Medical personnel
- Barbados
- 15.85 history of America
- 89.72 international organizations
- 378.729092 23
- LE15.W47 A824 2018
Item type | Current library | Call number | Status | Date due | Barcode | |
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OCLC Data | Available | 0000000038636 |
Includes bibliographical references and index.
"'The Grooming of a Chancellor' is Sir George Alleyne's autobiography. He was born in 1932 in St Philip, Barbados, the first of the seven children of Eileen, a homemaker, and Clinton Alleyne, a schoolmaster. With his signature charm, Alleyne recounts his experiences from primary and secondary school in racially divided Barbados to gaining a Barbados Scholarship to study medicine at the fledgling University College of the West Indies at Mona, Jamaica. Here he met and married a Jamaican woman, Sylvan Chen, and was socialized permanently as a West Indian. The process of that socialization and the intellectual environment of those early days at Mona would influence the rest of his life. Alleyne enjoyed a stellar academic career with prolific research output, and he remained for many years at the University of the West Indies, where he became a professor of medicine and had an enduring impact on generations of students. He entered the field of international health through the Pan American Health Organization, of which he became director - the first Caribbean national and non-Latin to do so. Alleyne recounts highlights of his management approach and the commitment to equity which characterized his terms of office. The work of international bodies is often bound up in politics, but he navigated these and influenced the discourse at the highest levels. He had a strong commitment to and was active in Caribbean health, especially HIV/AIDS awareness, prevention and control.In 2003, Alleyne returned to the University of the West Indies, his Capistrano in the Caribbean, as chancellor, and for fourteen years he executed the functions of that office in a manner that enhanced the public persona of his alma mater. His has been a remarkable journey, one he shares with readers through his memories and personal reflections."--Back cover.
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